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Mai Duong is fighting for her young life from her hospital room at Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital.

The 34-year-old woman is there for her second stretch is as many years. Her case of acute leukemia, first diagnosed in January 2013, relapsed in May of this year — just 10 months after being given a clean bill of health from her doctor.

If she had a bone marrow or umbilical cord stem cell transplant, her likelihood of survival would increase significantly. But she is Vietnamese, and that means her chances of finding a compatible donor are rarer than for most people.

That’s because only 19 per cent of bone marrow donors in Quebec are non-white. On top of that, just 4.7 per cent of blood donors in Quebec are of visible minorities.

Just one per cent of the bone marrow registry is composed of Vietnamese people.

Duong told CBC Daybreak about her year-and-a-half struggle with leukemia on Friday.

Diagnosed while pregnant

It began at the start of 2013, when she was 15 weeks pregnant with her second child. She went in for routine pregnancy blood tests but came back with a diagnosis of acute leukemia.

She had to have an abortion in order to start intensive chemotherapy treatments right away. Placed in an isolation chamber for six weeks, Duong was unable to see her four-year-old daughter, Alice.

One month later, she returned home and continued chemotherapy treatments. She eventually went into total remission.

Her relapse was discovered in May in a routine blood test.

Few visible minorities among Quebec donors

A spokeswoman for Quebec’s blood and stem cell bank Héma-Québec said the organization is working hard to reach out to cultural communities, who constitute a low percentage of the 47,000 Quebecers currently registered on the stem cell registry.

Vietnamese people make up just one per cent of the Quebec bone marrow registry; that percentage is about the same on the international registry as well, said Laurent Paul Ménard of Héma-Québec media relations.

He said there is no registry at all in Vietnam.

“It is very, very difficult to find a perfectly compatible match for patients of minorities. That’s why we’re trying to reach out to communities, such as the Vietnamese community, to register to our registry. Once the donors are subscribed to our registry, then they are available to any patient at the international level that are in need of a bone marrow transplant,” SuzieJoron told CBC Daybreak host SonaliKarnick.

Duong said her brother, who had a 30 per cent chance of matching, was not a match.

And so she is waiting for a compatible Vietnamese donor to come forward and get tested.